Origins and rebranding The company was originally incorporated in October 1997 as Aero Surveys Limited and later rebranded its activities as
Air Shuttle. It operated two
Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante aircraft for domestic charters and
air taxi services, gaining its
Air Operator's Certificate (AOC), in August 2009. In 2011, the ownership of the airline changed, which resulted in a further rebranding to a new commercial name,
Starbow, with regional flights in mind. A communication and recruitment campaign was launched and two 94 seat
BAe 146-300 jet aircraft were acquired for scheduled domestic passenger services. Starbow began domestic flights out of Accra International Airport on 26 September 2011, serving
Kumasi and
Tamale. The aircraft offered both business and economy class seating. Starbow added its 3rd destination on 8 November 2011, with return flights to
Takoradi from its
Accra base.
Expansion plans curtailed On 3 February 2012, after just five months in operation, Starbow announced that they had finalised a deal to lease two additional
BAe 146-300 aircraft that would double their fleet size to four aircraft. The aircraft entered into service less than 6 months later. Starbow's first international route was announced on 31 July 2012. The up to 5 times weekly service from
Accra to
Cotonou in
Benin started 13 August 2012.
Abidjan in the
Ivory Coast became the carrier's second international destination. The route launched on 8 November 2012 with flights operating up to 5 times weekly from
Accra. Starbow also expressed ambitions for further regional routes to be provided. Starbow announced on 16 December 2012 that they were adding a 97-seat
BAe 146-200 to their fleet. However, in early 2013 all international services were suspended due to poor performance. In November 2013, press reports said that Starbow were to go ahead with fleet renewal plans following the recent appointment of an agent to dispose of the current fleet of two BAe 146-300s and one BAe 146–200, with the third BAe 146-300 being sold for parts. Collectively, the aircraft average 25 years of age. Starbow was reportedly still considering its options for potential replacement aircraft. Also in November 2013, Starbow's CEO James Eric Antwi said they would move their business out of Ghana if the Government does not address the concerns of domestic airlines, citing small market size and low fares as some of their concerns, and saying that Starbow could relocate their business to other countries such as the
Ivory Coast.
Operations suspended As a consequence of an accident on 25 November 2017, all of Starbow's operations were suspended. ==Destinations==